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Jane Kamensky
Words and Chains
Can speech heal history's harms?

Representing Slavery: A roundtable discussion
A.J. Verdelle The Truth of the Picnic
Karen Sutton Confronting Slavery Face-to-face
David Blight The Birth of a Genre
Alex Bontemps Seeing Slavery
Shane White, Graham White Hearing Slavery
Cheryl Finley
The Door of (No) Return
Identity politics and cultural heritage tourism in Ghana
Aaron Garrett
Of Racism and Remembrance
Jefferson's legacy

Kathleen Brown Americans on the James
Re-reading American Slavery, American Freedom by Edmund S. Morgan
Walter Johnson A Nettlesome Classic Turns
Twenty-Five
Re-reading Roll, Jordan, Roll by Eugene D. Genovese
Judith Jackson Fossett
Slaves You Have Never Seen
Review of Slaves on Screen by Natalie Zemon Davis
Sally Hadden
Searching for Identities in the New Orleans Slave Market
Review of Soul by Soul by Walter Johnson
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Jeffrey L. Pasley
E-Abolitionists
Can the slaves be freed with a click of the mouse?
 
Catherine Corman
Sans Souci
Escaping without escaping history

Richard S. Dunn
From Minnesota to Barbados, Jamaica, Virginia, and Alabama
One historian's journey into American slavery

Alden T. Vaughan and Virginia Mason Vaughan
In Search of Slavery's English Roots
The Folger Library's less heralded holdings

Gloria Sesso
The Lion's Den
Teaching about slavery

Martha Zierden
The Journey of Miles Brewton's Bottle
Whose trash is it?

The Republic of Letters is an automated electronic discussion of the contents of Common-place. Readers of Common-place can post replies to the articles and participate in an ongoing discussion.
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